Enduring Ministry / Author's Intro
If I were to boil Enduring Ministry down to two essential actions, both would relate directly to vision. Most importantly, take time for solitude with God and anchor yourself in the vision of being unimaginably loved and cherished. There is no better orientation for ministry. Then, stay connected with those who hold you to a wholesome vision for ministry and who support you in your ongoing discernment.
Enduring Ministry Reflection, Celebrating the Release
This past week I found myself right at home in Mark 6. The disciples are sent out two by two, preaching, casting out demons, and anointing the sick. After a time they return to Jesus and tell “him all that they had done and taught” (6:30, NRSV) Jesus replies, "Come away by yourselves to a deserted place all by yourselves and rest a while" (31). Sometimes that's exactly what we want to hear, the expectation we have as we climb into the boat with Jesus. Listen for what really happens: “Now many saw them going and recognized them, and they hurried there on foot from all the towns and arrived ahead of them” (33). The disciples did not get the deserted place they wanted. What the disciples do get is a boat ride with Jesus between crowds. This book and this evening is about the boat ride. What happens, what needs to happen when we're sent out, when we're serving, and when we're on the boat journeying with Christ on the way to the next crowd so that we get off the boat and continue serving like Jesus? “As he went ashore, he saw a great crowd; and he had compassion for them, because they were like sheep without a shepherd; and he began to teach them many things” (34). Whatever happened on that boat, Jesus sets foot ashore and demonstrates an enduring ministry.
The Gospel of John in Poem and Image
The Gospel of John opens with rich poetic imagery and unfolds into twenty-one chapters full of symbols and signs that point to Jesus Christ as truly human and truly divine. This collection of fifty-six reader's poems, combined with twenty-six original pieces of art printed in full color, offers an inviting first read to those new to the Gospel and fresh perspective to those long familiar with its themes.
There is no substitute for reading the Scriptures themselves again and again. This resource, in fact, flows directly from that kind of sustained reading. Like artists throughout the centuries, siblings Samuel Rahberg and Natalie Rahberg have employed the disciplines of writing and visual art to share with others the fruits of their own prayer. May each reader be led back to the Christ revealed in the Gospel of John.
Poem: Lukewarm
Neither too hot nor too cold
is the greater danger
to common life.
Hot heads fuel fear,
cold hearts still harmonies,
yet nothing sours the will for good
like the bite of indifference.
“Behold,” the Holy One calls, “I stand at the door and knock.”
We may not have
the fire to drive him away
nor the ice to refuse him,
but let us not be caught
humming to ourselves,
pretending he’s not there.
Set down tepid ways,
rise up,
and put a hand to the latch.
Poem: As A Shadow
Were I to sit with the setting sun
warm upon my face,
she might cast a long shadow
of the man I want to be.
The dark form waits patiently,
watching, growing
whether or not anyone looks on.
When brightness makes clear
what does not belong,
it shows more clarity and depth
than cold refusal.
The shadow is sure and ever-faithful,
sometimes cloud-hidden,
never truly absent.
Should darkness fall it does not flee
but settles calmly into
grace-filled unknowns.
May I become one such shadow—nearly unnoticed—a steadfast reminder of the sun.